should be paved. Better is an adverb
Better paved
the road to hell is paved with good intentions
The word street is a noun. It is a paved part of a road.
Dates from 1920s America when insider-trading was legal. Refers to information about companies being dispersed on Wall Street.
take the high roada tough road to hoefollow the yellow brick roadon a road to nowhereat a cross roadsone for the roadthe road to hell is paved with good intentionsLet's get this show on the road.hit the roadsomewhere down the roadbeen down that road beforeroad hogjust a bump in the road
Stuck in a rut is a phrase, but I am not sure if an idiom is the same thing as a phrase. You may be thinking of a cliche and "stuck in a RUT" is a cliche. "Stuck in a road" is neither cliche nor idiom.
should be
On a paved road.
Yield to the vehicle on the paved road in all instances
Both but more likely adverb
Yield to the vehicle on the paved road in all instances
michigan. the first paved road in the united states was a portion of woodward avenue
A paved road. Metalled road.
yes
the road to hell is paved with good intentions
Samuel Johnson said,"The road of good intentions is paved with hell." by saed.
The cast of A Cracked Paved Road - 2012 includes: Michael Byrne as Poet
Yes, paved can be used as an adjective -- a paved road. It's also the past tense and past participle of pave.